Dr. David Mantik and “Back to the Left”
Did Dr. David Mantik think the “Back and to the Left” motion of JFK’s head and torso during z313 through z318 indicate a shot from the front?
Here is what he said in his article:
SPECIAL EFFECTS IN THE ZAPRUDER FILM
by David W Mantik, M.D., Ph.D.
Now, several years later, I have come to a surprising conclusion— no explanation
offered so far is either correct or relevant. I do not believe that a frontal shot, with any
reasonable sized rifle or bullet, could produce the observed head snap-too much energy
is required. Alvarez's explanation, also, is inadequate and irrelevant. By taking both of
these positions, I risk losing any friends that I might have on either side of this issue!
In this essay I present new information regarding the authenticity of the Zapruder
film. I also review old evidence, some well known (but perhaps misunderstood) and some
overlooked, but chiefly I attempt to integrate a wide variety and quantity of evidence that
bears on this question. It is only recently that this issue has come to the fore. There is an
unusual diversity and amount of evidence that points toward alteration— too much, in fact
to be ignored:
. . .
In other words, if the Zapruder film is authentic, the backwards motion is unlikely to be caused by a bullet from the front. Dr. Mantik’s explains this by saying what the Zapruder film shows is irrelevant, because it was clearly faked.
Yes. That’s right. Dr. Mantik thinks the government altered the Zapruder film, and made it show JFK’s head and torso moving in the opposite direction of the TSBD Sniper’s nest. Yes. This makes a lot of sense. I’m surprised I didn’t think of it myself.
And, of course, this means all the other problems with this theory. Modifying all the other films and photographs to make them consistent. And hoping there were not any films or photographs that you don’t know about. All this was done to show JFK’s head and torso moving backwards.
I guess CTers would say that when it comes to biology, he is absolutely brilliant. So, when he says the neuromuscular spasm could not occur in a human, his judgement is absolutely correct. But when it comes to physics, he doesn’t know what he is talking about. Of course, a rifle bullet could push back JFK in the matter observed in the Zapruder film. What was Dr. Mantik thinking?
Well. I would like to point out that as far as a bullet push hypothesis is concerned, the numbers support Dr. Mantik.
JFK’s head and torso moved with a maximum speed by z318 of 1.9 mph. Only the upper part of his body moved backwards, so that’s about 100 pounds. And it rotated about the hips, so it’s more like moving 50 pounds. So, the momentum imparted to JFK’s body, either by a bullet or his muscles, was 19,000 grams meters per second or 19,000 g m/s.
Oswald’s rifle firing a WCC/MC cartridge, at maximum velocity just beyond the muzzle, 160 grains at 2160 ft/s has a momentum of only 6,800 g m/s. Not nearly enough, considering that high-speed bullets only deposit about half their momentum into a body, because the bullet or the bullet fragments continue on with about half its “pristine” speed.
A M1 Garland? 165 grains at 2800 f/s, resulting in a momentum of 9,100 g m /s. No good either.
OK, let’s up our game a little. How about a single round from a M2 Browning machine gun? 647 grains, 3000 f/s, 38,000 g m/s. Yes, that might do it. But there is no report of an entrance wound corresponding to a bullet that large. Could it enter the large wound caused by an earlier head shot that just occurred? Yes, but it would deposit a lot less than half it’s momentum if it didn’t have to penetrate the skull twice. And good luck putting an effective silencer on that baby. And everyone’s attention was not immediately drawn to the source of that shot?
It is just plain difficult to come up with a weapon that could push JFK’s head and torso back at 2 mph. Let alone do so over the course of a quarter second. And continue to push the head and torso back with ever increasing speed long after the bullet exited the body. Which is my biggest objection to the bullet push theory, over and beyond the implausible magnitude of the push that Dr. Mantik found to be so implausible.